Atom
False. Electrons are not distributed randomly; they occupy specific energy levels or orbitals around the nucleus of an atom, which contains positively charged protons. The arrangement of electrons is governed by quantum mechanics, leading to a defined structure rather than a random distribution.
In Thomson's plum pudding model, electrons are dispersed evenly throughout a positively charged sphere, much like raisins in a plum pudding. The electrons do not have specific locations within the sphere and are considered to be uniformly distributed.
No, Electrons are negatively charged.
A positively charge body is deficient in electrons (electrons are negatively charge, so a lack of them results in something being positively charged).
A material that loses electrons becomes positively charged.
they are distributed by there density distributions they are distributed by there density distributions
Yes, a surface that loses electrons become positively changed. It becomes a cation
They lose electrons.
True. When a surface loses electrons, it becomes positively charged because it has more positively charged protons compared to the negatively charged electrons.
A piece of fur becomes positively charged when it loses electrons to another object through friction, causing it to have an excess of protons compared to electrons. This imbalance of positive charge results in the fur being positively charged.
less electrons.
An atom becomes a positively charged ion when it loses one or more electrons.